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IRS Drops 2026 Tax Bomb: 60+ New Provisions Coming Your Way Under Rev Proc 2025-32

IRS Drops 2026 Tax Bomb: 60+ New Provisions Coming Your Way Under Rev Proc 2025-32

Published:
2025-10-09 21:45:36
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IRS releases 2026 tax updates under Revenue Procedure 2025‑32, covering more than 60 provisions

The taxman cometh—with more paperwork than ever before.

Sixty fresh provisions now target everything from crypto holdings to business deductions. Revenue Procedure 2025-32 doesn't just tweak the system—it overhauls how the IRS tracks your every financial move.

Digital assets face heightened scrutiny as the agency tightens reporting requirements. New compliance measures could make your annual tax filing feel like a full-scale audit.

Business owners brace for revised depreciation schedules and updated mileage rates. Retirement accounts get new contribution limits while estate planning rules shift beneath wealthy feet.

The IRS claims these changes 'modernize' tax administration—translation: they're building a better mousetrap while you're still the mouse. Because nothing says financial innovation like giving government more ways to count your money.

IRS raises deductions and orders furlough

The IRS also announced updated standard deductions for 2026. Couples filing jointly will deduct $32,200. Heads of household will deduct $24,150. Single filers and married individuals will deduct $16,100.

Seniors are also included, with the president’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act allowing an extra $6,000 deduction for people aged 65 and older. That benefit is now capped at an adjusted gross income of $75,000 for single taxpayers and $150,000 for couples, and it is scheduled to end in 2028.

On the same day, the IRS revealed an agency‑wide furlough beginning October 8, the direct result of the federal government shutdown. Taxpayers with an October 15 extension deadline won’t get more time. “Taxpayers should continue to file, deposit, and pay federal income taxes as they normally would; the lapse in appropriations does not change Federal Income Tax responsibilities,” a spokesperson told CBS News.

IRS outlines how brackets work and impact of OBBBA

The IRS reminded filers that U.S. taxes have seven brackets: 10%, 12%, 22%, 24%, 32%, 35% and 37%, with each percentage applying to a slice of income, not the whole paycheck. For instance, a single person with $50,000 in taxable income in 2026 will pay 10% on the first $12,400, then 12% on the remaining $37,600.

For instance, a married couple with $150,000 in gross income would first subtract the 2026 standard deduction of $32,200 from that amount, leaving them with $117,800 in taxable income. That would put their top marginal tax rate at 22%.

However, their effective tax rate is much lower:

  • Their first $24,800 of income will be taxed at 10%, or $2,480 in taxes
  • Their earnings from $24,800 to $100,800 would be taxed at 12%, or $9,120 in taxes
  • Their income from $100,800 to $117,800 would be taxed at 22%, or $3,740 in taxes

The changes also connect to the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed by President Donald TRUMP in July. That law locked in most of the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, stopping hikes that were on the horizon. The Tax Foundation estimated the average filer will save $3,752 in 2026, though the size of the benefit depends on where they live and how much they earn.

The differences are clear in new data. Households in the bottom fifth, earning up to $34,600, will save about $150 in 2026, equal to 0.8% of their income. Households in the top fifth, earning $217,101 or more, will save an average of $12,540, or 2.5% of their income.

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